Iran Plans Second Attempt To Launch Monkeys Into Space

Iranian space officials announced they will make another attempt to launch a live monkey into space within the next month, according to news reports.

“Testing phase of these living capsules has ended and monkeys to be sent to space are now in quarantine,” Hamid Fazeli, head of the Iranian Space Agency, was quoted as saying by the country’sMehr News Agency on Tuesday (Jan. 15).

“These monkeys will be sent into space according to a timetable on Fajr Ceremonies,” Fazeli said, referring to a 10-day period in the beginning of February when the Iranian Revolution is commemorated. He added that the capsule is called Pishgam, which means “pioneer” in Farsi.

Iran apparently failed in a 2011 effort to launch a live monkey into space. News reports out of the country at that time did not explain what went wrong, but the plan had been to send a Rhesus monkey into orbit atop a Kavoshgar-5 rocket.

A successful mission this time around would seem to advance Iran’s goal of sending a human into space by 2020 and an astronaut on the moon by 2025.

“Monkeys have similarities to humans, so with them in space, we can examine human factors in space,” Fazeli told Mehr News.

Iran has made progress in spaceflight technology in recent years. The country sent its first domestically built satellite into space in February 2009 and launched a Kavoshagar-3 rocket in 2010 that delivered a rat, two turtles and a worm into space. Iran also sent Earth-observing satellites into orbit in 2011 and 2012.

Western critics have expressed concern over the potential military applications of Iran’s rocket program since boosters developed to reach space could also be used as long-range ballistic missiles. The Islamic republic has denied such ambitions for its space program.